[nagdu] Guide dog school that offers guide dogs to childrenbetween the ages of 11 & 17 years old.

Ashley Coleman amc05111 at gmail.com
Sun Jun 2 21:16:16 UTC 2013


 From my understanding; the dog was under wait, and the handeler 
sometimes was very forceful with the dog.
AC
On 6/2/2013 4:15 PM, Sarah wrote:
> What were the handler's action? How was he/she treating the dog?
>
> Sarah and Wizard
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Ashley Coleman <amc05111 at gmail.com
> To: "NAGDU Mailing List,the National Association of Guide Dog Users" 
> <nagdu at nfbnet.org
> Date sent: Sun, 02 Jun 2013 14:10:55 -0400
> Subject: Re: [nagdu] Guide dog school that offers guide dogs to 
> childrenbetween the ages of 11 & 17 years old.
>
> Hi there,
> I received my first guide dog at the age of 20.
>
> In response to this topic I have to say that I have heard nothing but
> negative from this organization.  There was a student who attends the
> same University as myself and people were telling me how the handeler
> was treating the dog, and at one point I was told that that was the way
> the dog was supposed to be treated, and I disagree.
>
> The handeler eventually had the dog taken from themself.
>
> Ashley
>
>  On 6/2/2013 12:56 PM, Rebecca Sabo wrote:
> Hi all,
> I got my first guide dog when I was 18.  I thought I was ready for a 
> guide dog at that time.  I retired the dog when I was at the Colorado 
> center for the blind in Colorado.  I waited a couple of years to get 
> another dog.  I am on my fourth dog.  I do not no of anyone who got a 
> dog at a young age.  You have to be ready to take care of a guide dog 
> .  It is like having a child.
> BeckySabo
> On Jun 1, 2013, at 8:39 PM, rhonda cruz <rhondaprincess at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> hi i got my dog when i was 22.  years old.  and it worked out good.  
> i  have never seen a younger person get a dog.  from a program.  i 
> only have older friends.  that have them.  but i think it is up to the 
> person.
> it is like taking care of a kid.
>
> On May 31, 2013, at 8:28 PM, Nicole Torcolini wrote:
>
> First, let me say that I know someone who received a dog at a young  
> age (I
> cannot remember the exact age) from a Canadian organization, probably the
> one mentioned in this article.  I cannot remember the whole story, but I
> think that, eventually, there was some sort of problem with the dog, 
> but it
> was the dog, and not the person.  So, although I agree that the cases 
> where
> getting a guide dog at a young age may be few, they do exist.
>
> In general I think that it could probably be said that, as you lower the
> age, the number of cases were getting a guide dog works out well gets 
> lower
> and lower.  I agree that eleven is too low, but I also think that 
> sixteen is
> also a little to high.  I think that people should at least be able to be
> evaluated for a guide dog around thirteen or fourteen.  Sometimes, 
> there can
> be more things that need to be worked out before a person can get a 
> dog than
> the person thought, and having a year or two to work those out would be
> nice.
>
> I agree that having a dog around other people, especially kids, might be
> hard for a child.  Most children are still in elementary school at age
> eleven, and elementary schools usually have at least first graders if not
> kindergarteners.
>
> The whole thing about people talking about only the dog I think is not
> always a problem.  JMHO, if someone wants to talk just about my dog and
> nothing else, then I don't want to talk to them.  I have met very few 
> people
> who insisted on talking about nothing but the dog, and, for most of those
> people, I have gotten it through to them that the dog is not the main
> concern at the moment and that there are other things that need to be 
> done.
> Even for those people who start by talking about the dog, they do not 
> seem
> to mind when I change the subject; they sometimes change it themselves.
> Would this be the same for a child? I really cannot say.  I think that
> younger children may want to stick more to the topic of dogs, but I think
> that teenagers would not so much.
>
> I definitely agree that good O&M skills are a must before getting a guide
> dog.  That does not just include knowing how to use a cane but also 
> knowing
> where you are and which direction you are pointing relative to your
> surroundings.  I do see how a child might try to avoid using a cane just
> because having a dog is cooler.  No, I don't necessarily like my cane, 
> but
> that has nothing to do with the fact that the cane means that I am blind.
>
> I don't really know what to say about things not working out with the
> family.  I think that there would need to be some kind of information 
> for the
> family, and some way for the representatives from the guide dog school to
> talk to the child about how things are going without parents skewing the
> information.  Sometimes, when I have to keep reminding people about 
> things
> about my guide dog, I joke about sending them to the guide dog 
> training just
> so that they can learn the rules.
>
> I do agree that responsibility for the dog can be a problem, but I think
> that it should be considered on a case by case basis.  Perhaps a strongly
> recommended prerequisite for a child getting a guide dog is that the 
> child
> has to be able to take care of a family pet almost independently before
> getting a guide dog.  When I was eleven, my family got a pet dog, and,
> although I did not do everything, I could do most of the tasks for taking
> care of her on my own.  Had push come to shove, I would have found a 
> way to
> do the other tasks.  But my parents have always encouraged my 
> independence,
> so I certainly see where it could be more of a problem of parents 
> wanting to
> help too much.  Perhaps there could be some sort of paperwork for the 
> parents
> as well saying that the dog is the responsibility of the child and the
> parents are not supposed to help too much.  I do definitely agree that 
> this
> is important for a good working relation with the dog, especially in the
> first few months.
>
> I agree that it needs to be the choice of the child to get a guide 
> dog.  It
> most certainly was me, not my parents, who decided that I would get a 
> guide
> dog.  They most certainly were not against it, but it was my decision, 
> and
> they have always been mostly supportive of letting make my own personal
> choices.
>
> I also agree that having a child get a guide dog because the child is
> supposedly safer is not a valid reason for a child to get a guide dog,
> especially if the parents expect the dog to protect the child.
>
> I do agree that some people are probably not mature enough at thirteen or
> fourteen to get a guide dog, but I am sure that some do exist. Again, 
> it is
> something that needs to be considered differently for each situation.
>
> It is not *horrible* to wait till you are sixteen, but I certainly would
> have enjoyed a guide dog a little sooner than I got one.  I find 
> travel that
> much easier and more enjoyable with a dog rather than a cane.
>
> Perhaps one way of trying to make sure that the dog was actually used 
> as a
> guide dog and did not just become a pet would be to have stricter vision
> requirements for younger children as I feel that younger children are 
> more
> likely to use (or try to use) any remaining vision that they have.  
> This gets
> back to that a person needs to have accepted his/her blindness before
> getting a guide dog.
>
> I also don't like that people think that children can be more independent
> just because they have a guide dog.  There is nothing that keeps a parent
> from reaching over and holding on to his/her child if the child has a dog
> any more than if the child has a cane.  I am an adult, and people 
> still try
> to hold onto and direct me when I am using my dog.
>
> Returning to the point about children having to tell people, including
> people older than him/her, not to pet the dog, I can definitely tell 
> where
> this would be a problem.  However, if it is junior high and not 
> elementary
> school, I would think that the school staff could come to understand the
> rules, even if it had to come from someone other than the child, such 
> as a
> rep from the guide dog school.
>
> As a closing case, I will say that, although I reference my 
> experiences in
> this email, my experiences certainly are not those of every blind child.
>
> Nicole
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: nagdu [mailto:nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Deanna Lewis
> Sent: Friday, May 31, 2013 5:05 AM
> To: NAGDU Mailing List, the National Association of Guide Dog
> Users(nagdu at nfbnet.org)
> Subject: [nagdu] Guide dog school that offers guide dogs to children 
> between
> the ages of 11 & 17 years old.
>
> What do you all think about this...
> Deanna and Pascal
>
>
>
> MIRA - The only organization in the United States dedicated to providing
> guide dogs to blind children and youth between the ages of 11-17.
>
> MIRA: from the Spanish "look", "to have one's sights set on", was the
> nickname of a favorite guide dog trained by Eric St.  Pierre, founder 
> of MIRA
> Canada.  MIRA Foundation USA takes its name from its collaboration 
> with MIRA
> Canada, a nonprofit organization founded in 1981 upon the belief that all
> individuals, regardless of their physical challenges, should be able 
> to set
> their sights on the same goals as those people born without handicaps.
>
> Today, MIRA Canada is recognized as a global leader in the breeding,
> selection, and training of guide and service dogs.  MIRA USA was 
> created in
>
> 2008 as a legally separate entity, but with close ties to MIRA Canada, 
> where
> our dogs are currently trained.
>
> Our mission is to offer blind children in the United States between 
> the ages
> of 11-17 the opportunity to receive guide dogs free of charge, to provide
> targeted educational outreach to promote public awareness, and, as we
> continue to grow, to offer support services to the adult population of 
> blind
> and their families.
>
> It is our experience that blind children, for the most part, are highly
> adaptive, fiercely determined, and seek to have many of the same
> opportunities as their sighted peers.  Although a cane provides an 
> adequate
> degree of mobility for the blind and severely visually impaired, there
> remain some serious limitations.  For example, it is impossible to 
> navigate
> with a cane when there is no tactical information such as what is 
> provided
> by sidewalks.  A child living in a rural area is severely challenged 
> by this
> restriction.
>
> Furthermore, a cane tends to be isolating, whereas a dog provides a 
> social
> bridge to the sighted community.  Not only are dogs social creatures, 
> they
> also provide stability and a level of protection through their visual
> awareness training that a cane could never replicate.
>
> Finally, a guide dog provides a young blind person with a greater 
> level of
> self-reliance at an early age.  Although a very young student is not 
> going to
> be out on the streets alone with their dog, having the ability to 
> navigate
> without holding a parent's hand is crucial to developing maturity and
> confidence.  The student's freedom and mobility are especially 
> enhanced in
> the school environment with the assistance of a guide dog. Although 
> there is
> no cure for blindness, there can be hope, and we at MIRA witness it every
> day through the service of a MIRA guide dog.
>
> http://www.mirausa.org/
>
>
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